As someone who frequently charges at DCFCs (we have done probably close to three or four hundred DCFCs), I have a complicated relationship with charge times. I want it to either be 2 minutes 20%-80% so I can charge, move the vehicle, and go do my walk, eat, restroom, etc. without blocking the stall. Or I want it to be 25 minutes so I can plug in, go do my walk, eat, restroom, etc.
A 10-minutes charge is the worst. It's too much time to want to sit there and not enough time to get anything done.
To get a 5 minutes charge rate, you need to go to 12C charging. For an 88 kWh battery, 400 Volts would require 2640 Amps. There aren't any chargers in North America that can pump that kind of current into a vehicle. An 800 V battery would require 1320 Amps. Still not available.
The CCS1 standard (the fastest consumer charging standard in North America) allows a maximum of 500 Amps at 1000 Volts. That gives 500 kW maximum. To get a 5-minute 0%-100% charge (12C charge rate), you'd need a battery smaller than 42 kWh. To get a 60% charge in 5 minutes, this needs an approximately 70 kWh battery. This assumes no losses and that the power to cool the battery comes from some other source. It also is entirely agnostic of the battery chemistry. Could be SSB, LFP, NMC, whatever.
A 10-minutes charge is the worst. It's too much time to want to sit there and not enough time to get anything done.
To get a 5 minutes charge rate, you need to go to 12C charging. For an 88 kWh battery, 400 Volts would require 2640 Amps. There aren't any chargers in North America that can pump that kind of current into a vehicle. An 800 V battery would require 1320 Amps. Still not available.
The CCS1 standard (the fastest consumer charging standard in North America) allows a maximum of 500 Amps at 1000 Volts. That gives 500 kW maximum. To get a 5-minute 0%-100% charge (12C charge rate), you'd need a battery smaller than 42 kWh. To get a 60% charge in 5 minutes, this needs an approximately 70 kWh battery. This assumes no losses and that the power to cool the battery comes from some other source. It also is entirely agnostic of the battery chemistry. Could be SSB, LFP, NMC, whatever.